
The story opens with a young woman, newly arrived in an unfamiliar Italian town, grappling with isolation as she awaits the return of her lover Sidney. She writes a candid letter to her family back in England, describing the cold, candle‑lit inn, the distant bell tower, and the strange customs that surround her.
Through our eyes we glimpse the tension between her humble English upbringing and the cultured world her partner inhabits—art galleries, ancient ruins, and the bustling streets of Venice. Her uneasy relationship with the inn’s stern landlady Chiara and the widowed landlord adds a layer of domestic unease, while memories of Aunt Rachel’s care linger.
As days slip by, the narrator’s longing intensifies, mixing homesickness with a growing sense of independence. The narrative promises a journey of self‑discovery as she confronts cultural differences, personal doubts, and the mystery of Sidney’s disappearance, setting the stage for a tale of love, identity, and resilience.
Language
en
Duration
~11 hours (641K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Al Haines
Release date
2019-03-19
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects

1832–1911
An evangelical English writer who became hugely popular for stories that mixed moral purpose with vivid portraits of poor and working-class children. Writing under the name Hesba Stretton, she helped shape Victorian children's fiction with books that aimed to stir both sympathy and social conscience.
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